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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1992; 19:1426-1434
© 1992 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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A study on coronary hemodynamics during acetylcholine-induced coronary spasm in patients with variant angina: endothelium-dependent dilation in the resistance vessels

K Okumura, H Yasue, K Matsuyama, H Ogawa, K Kugiyama, N Sakaino, H Yamabe, and E Morita

Division of Cardiology, Kumamoto University Medical School, Japan.

The epicardial coronary artery of patients with variant angina is hyperreactive to the constrictive effect of acetylcholine, but it is not known whether the coronary microvasculature also constricts in response to acetylcholine. Incremental doses of acetylcholine were injected into the left coronary artery of 57 patients with variant angina and with spasm in this artery. By measuring coronary sinus blood flow, coronary hemodynamic status just before angiographic documentation of spasm was examined. Acetylcholine induced spasm in the left coronary artery in all patients. It also decreased the diameter of the nonspasm artery by 36 +/- 19% from baseline. For all patients, coronary sinus blood flow was 89 +/- 38 ml/min at baseline and increased to 104 +/- 61 ml/min during an acetylcholine-induced anginal attack (p less than 0.01). In 10 patients with spasm in both the left anterior descending and left circumflex arteries (that is, multivessel spasm), coronary sinus blood flow decreased from 84 +/- 21 to 52 +/- 26 ml/min (p less than 0.01). In the other 47 patients with spasm in only one of these two arteries (that is, single-vessel spasm), coronary sinus blood flow increased from 90 +/- 41 to 115 +/- 61 ml/min (p less than 0.01) without change in the rate-pressure product. It is concluded that in patients with variant angina, acetylcholine induces spasm and constriction in the epicardial coronary artery, whereas it dilates the resistance vessels presumably through the release of the endothelium-dependent relaxing factor.


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